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CA 8th Grade US History Standard 8.6.3, 8.6.7, 8.12.6
• By the 1840s and 50s factories had become the dominant work environment in America.
• Working conditions in factories were difficult.• People worked long hours• Pay was low• Living conditions were poor• Factories had limited ventilation• Few factories had heating systems• Machines were unsafe
• To try and improve working conditions.• Skilled workers began to form
trade unions• A trade union is an
association of workers formed to get better wages and working conditions for employees.
• The trade union petitioned employers for • Higher wages• Better working conditions• Shorter hours
• One strategy unions used to pressure employers to agreeing to their requests was a strike.• A strike is when union
workers refuse to do their jobs until their demands are met.
• The trade unions won several victories• President Van Buren ordered that all government
employees work no more than 10 hours a day.• In 1842, Massachusetts workers won the legal right to
strike.• Unfortunately, unskilled workers were easily replaced
so found it difficult to bargain for better wages and conditions.
• Women had a difficult time organizing unions because most men didn’t want the women in their unions.• But they were able to organize many successful
protests.
• Things changed in the 1840s and 50s with the influx of approximately 4 million immigrants to the United States.• An immigrant is a person who moves to
a new country.• Most of the immigrants were from
Ireland or Germany• Irish• Between 1840 and 1860 about 1.5
million Irish fled Ireland and the Irish Potato famine.
• Most settled in cities and took factory jobs.
• German• Most Germans came to America
fleeing an unsuccessful revolution.• They had money and bought farms in
the midwest.• Others offered skilled labor like coal
miners and iron workers.
• Some Americans were against immigration and formed a group called the Nativists.• These people wanted to preserve the
U.S. for• Native born• White• Protestants
• The nativists called for a cap on immigration.
• They also wanted immigrants to be 21 years old before becoming citizens.
• Nativists argued that immigrants• Stole jobs from native born
Americans• Raised the crime rate in cities• Were untrustworthy• Were Catholic
• The Nativists eventually formed their own political party.• They were officially the
American Party but were nicknamed the “Know-Nothing” Party.
• Many believed the American party would replace the crumbled Whig party.
• In 1856 the American party selected former President Millard Fillmore as their presidential candidate.
• Although he did not win, he did take 21% of the vote.
• Nativism eventually took a backseat to the slavery issue.